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The slide in the Indian rupee will continue without any oil relief, and Asia's FX weakness compounds the pain

The Indian rupee will likely continue to weaken?on Tuesday and could even reach an all-time record low. This is due to high oil prices which have been a drag on the currency for several weeks.

The currency is likely to be under pressure due to the weakness of Asian currencies amid low risk appetite and high U.S. rates.

The rupee will open between 96.35 and 96.40, traders say, after it settled at 96.3450, where it reached a life-low?of 96.3875 on Monday.

"Another Day, Another New High (on Dollar/Rupee). A currency trader from a bank said that for the moment it seems like?the current cycle (of rupee weakening) cannot be stopped.

It's obvious that it can't be.

He said that a significant shift in the fundamental drivers is needed, whether it's a correction of?oil price, which hasn't yet materialised, or concrete steps taken to boost?dollar flows.

The rupee is on a losing streak of seven days, losing 2.2%. It has also hit new lows. Since the Iran War began late in September, it has dropped more than 6%.

Brent crude hovered near $110 per barrel during Asian trading. Investors were weighing up whether the U.S. will and Iran reach an agreement to end the war and open the Strait of Hormuz.

U.S. president Donald Trump announced that he had paused an attack planned on Iran in order to allow for negotiation, providing "slight relief".

The risk appetite remained low, as U.S. equity indices fell and Asian equity markets declined. Weak sentiment affected?Asian currencies.

Investors have priced in the possibility that oil prices will'remain higher for longer and fuel inflation.

Fuel retailers in Delhi reported that India increased petrol and diesel prices on Tuesday by 0.9 rupees a litre, the second increase of this kind in a single week. (Reporting and editing by Rashmi aich; Nimesh vora)

(source: Reuters)